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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 11

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

cc THE SAN FRANCbCQ EXAMINER: 1UE5DAV, OCTOBER 5. 1926 11 i4fforney Finds EXPLORERSNQW FOUR STATES RAVAGED By His Best Shirt On City Prisoner HAS RELAPSE v.v FALL FLOODS Henry A. Snow, well, known explorer and bit fame hunter and head of the Oakland Municipal Zoo, suffered a partial stroke ot paralysis yesterday morning at his home 274 Nineteenth street. Oakland. He had recently returned to his borne from the Merrltt hospital after a serious Illness of a month and was believed to be convalescing.

1 Attorney James Carroll came before Police Judge Idle T. Jack yesterday wearing a frayed shirt. Usually Carroll Is exquisitely dressed. "That man In the dock there," said he to the court, pointing at Ltula Lara, a prisoner, "has on my bast shirt." "What do you want to do about it?" asked the court. "I want to get him out of Jail," said Carroll.

It was arranged. It seems Carroll came down the stairs of his home Sunday morning to get his laundry. He lives at Twenty-second avenue. He was just In time to see a man running away with the Carroll meekly wash. He called the police.

Policemen Frank Rhode, and Charles Cornelius captured Louis Lara later. He had on Carroll's fancy Sunday shirt. Ha 1 Drs. A. M.

Smith and Arthur Per-kins were summoned by Miss Nydlne Snow, whom her father had called when he awoke and found Residents of Towns on Mississippi Are Driven From Homes; Property Loss Very Heavy CHICAGO, Oct. 4. (AP-JoaJed to new rampages by phenomenal autumn rainfall, the rivers and streams of four States have continued Into October the havoc they wrought throughout last month, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma we counting flood he was unable to use his left hand The paralysis spread through the 'I 1 1 losses tonight with hundreds of left hand and Snow's condition was pronounced critical by the physicians. Snow had been in poor health for a ytar, following a heart attack, said to have been caused by fever contracted during his expedition to South He spent most of the summer In the Santa Crux mountains and was taken from there to the hospital. to the theft.

families homeless and many channels threatening to unload new tides of raglnsr water. Beardstown, 111., residents who spent many days' of September liolsterlne an Illinois river levee In Carroll said the reason he wanted to get Lara out of jail was so that he might find out where he has concealed the remainder of his laundry. face of rising water, saw their itorts made vain when a thirty foot break in the dyke admitted to tne city flood waters which swept the main streets and filled the south section of the city to the level of the river. MANY FAMILIES HOMELESS. A Great Store in a Great City I A if In the Store for Men 1200 Pairs Men's Flannelette Five hundred families were home-less tonight and many of them were accepting- aid from the Salvation Army, hloh ent relief from Gales-burs.

Downtown stores saw their first floors hidden beneath the tide, which made a torrent of one dqwntown thoroughfare for ten Mocks. Danville, 111., experienced the worst flood In thirteen years when the Vermillion river drove lowland residents to the housetops, whence they were rescued by police In boats. The Mississippi river reached the highest fall stage ever recorded at Alton, 111., and floods In the Missouri and Illinois rivers above St. Louis, near their confluence the larger stream, made many homeless and covered thousands of acres of corn and orchard lands. OKLAHOMA LIFE LOSS.

Over most of Kansas and Oklahoma flood conditions were less severe than on Sunday nlpht, with the water receding, but many streams had not yet returned to their hanks. Three lives were taken by the llaod In Oklahoma Sunday, Tracks were washed away and his-lnvays submersed in many lo-calities, particularly In Illinois. September rainfall recorded for the Middle West, compiled today by the Weather Bureau, show a srreat excess of precipitation from Western Ohio to Central Nevada, most notably at Springfield, where 15.16 Inches of ran fell during the month almost twelve Inches more than the normal amount i I I. 1 fa 3 1 f- 'Ms." a fj'i A -M Paj amas i Her parents continual "Don't, don't, don't," finally drove her to do just what she pleased, under cover, and this rebellious, growing girl proceeded to run die whole gamut of gaiety clandestine motor rides, sub rosa visits to road houses, prolonged petting parties, secret swimming fests, week-end bungalow revels a frank recital that will serve as a warning to parents and daughters, one that any father or mother may well read with profit. at unusually lou) prices $1.65 $1.95 $2.35 if THESE garments are fashioned of Teasel-down, 1921 and 1101 Amoskeag flannelette in three popular styles military collar, low neck and pull-over.

Made by "Valco," they will give the best of service comfort. Each pair is silk frog trimmed, cut full and expertly tailored. Sizes D. The prices are very low for such high grade garments. The Emporium Store for Men, F'trsl Floor Floods Cost Sonora Fully 100 Lives NOGALES Oct.

4. (By International News Service.) Refugees arriving' here from the State of Sonora, Mexico, todny declare that the property damage aouth of the border, due to last week's excessive rains will reach 10,000,000 and that the loss of life W'ill exceed one- hundred instead of thirty, the present estimate. The devastated area was described as watery waste, with water running In the roads like rivers. Two towns were leveled to the ground and the people fere without fod or shelter. -1 liOWiOWIN e.

ISA FRANCISCO I I tiH HE MELTED DOWN ENGLISH SOVEREIGNS TO GET PUREST COLD Would you, or wouldn't you, take you? husband back, if he flagrantly violated the moral code Two women who wer themselves confronted with this dilemma give utterly opposed answers to this vital question. Let us know how would have solved this poignant problem. mo 0 VICTORY The big football game of the year at Siddcrn University, with all its attendant thrills, and underlying it A nice point of honor involving the attractive co-ed" and her husky halfback sweetheart. Jlij LOVE SHIP that camtintht NIGHT As she stood clasped in Davey's arms, she suddenly descried through the star-lit night her shio-o'-drcams lazily coming into port, bearing her other lover and precipitating a jealous conflict that teems with heart-throbs and action. The China Girl Galled CHERRY LI A delicate, fragile blossom growing amid super-heated vice a true story which was written as a Prayer of Thanks, to a beautiful Chinese girL Mr.

Zicgfcld, as a front-row observer, saw just how many of the girls who formerly graced the ranks of his famous Follies productions graduated into families of tide, wealth and social position, and tells about it jn an absorbing article. BECAUSE I loved him SO A new and true twist on the age-old story of how, despite a parent's stern opposition, the magnetic wand of romance drew together a charming heiress and a real man. Self-risen from humble East-side origin. continuing Men Who Have Kissed Me the frank revelation of one womxn'i emotional impulses. a Woman's Past Her Own?" illuminating exposition by Magistrate Chxrlcs A.

Oberwager, based on his experiences as presiding judge of the Woman's Court and Court Domestic Relations, New York. "Infatuation" hectic moments in tha life of a girl in the glare of the studio-lights at Hollywood. "The Truth about Sheiks," How Can I Get My Reputation Back?" Smart Set's Pictorial Gallery of Beauty. not to be confuted with the ordinary, factory product. Men who demand the ultimately fine prefer Swan Eternal Pens.

You will understand why as soon as you put your Swan to paper. Then ten, twenty, thirty years of perfect service The better stores have Swan Eternal in three sizes at five, seven or nine dollars. Ask for a demonstration. Johs abie, a founder of the house of Mabie Todd, couldn't find gold of proper fineness for his pens only gold coin would do. That was many years ago.

Today Mabie Todd makers of Swan Eternal Pens, are just as rigorous in their manufacturing standards as they ere in 1843. Swan is the bench-made pen 1 1 a 1 TkT Th Tin TO) TT? YD nm n. n. r. -h PENS PENCILS wan rZA I In JLj 1 vil Km ILj iLl 's'st, H.

S.CtocKit Inc. San Frandsco, Distributors trrry Etrrntf it mmctnditiamtUf fmrnrtntted; fuartntre bcti Sltbil TJJ Ctmsiif'i; nf-lr fftrt" rttrd im fxftri ftM-Miiinf, True Stories from Real Life.

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About The San Francisco Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
3,027,574
Years Available:
1865-2024